Transit is Refugee Romance with Unforeseen Twist

Based on the novel by Anna Seghers, you know in the first few intense frames of Transitthat this story will resonate not only with the heart, but remind one of the similarities surrounding immigration issues we face right now in America and Jews fleeing Germany to France after the invasion.

The film opens in France where we are introduced to Georg (Franz Rogowski) as he desperately attempts to flee. Stumbling upon a tragic murder and manuscript, Georg assumes the author - Weidel's identity as a means to safely continue travel.  As if things couldn't become more complicated, Georg keeps running into Weidel's wife Marie (Paula Beer) in Marseilles, who consistently mistakes Georg for her dead husband who she doesn't know is deceased.

With elements of Cold War, Casablancaand many other throwbacks to classic Hollywood film-noir flicks, Transitis a complicated buffet of a man who discovers love and responsibility for someone other than himself.  He navigates through life in the present with nothing to lose until he loses his best friend and the love of his life.

There are many moments that have stuck with me well beyond the credits.  Watching the beauty of the countryside from the window of a rapid fire train as it glides from one destination to the next. Georg's connection with Driss (Lilien Batman), who immediately transports him to his own childhood prompting him to sing is heartwarming and heartbreaking all at once.  The moment in which a woman he meets by chance takes her own life rather than live an existence of loneliness.  And then there's that final moment, where every time the door to the cafe opens Georg envisions Marie.  Marie who represents the type of love that can't be destroyed by space or time.  It lives on forever in your soul, whether that soul still inhabits the earth or not.

Last but not least, through Transitand the direction of Christian Petzoldyou are reminded of a section of the world that literally has to flee from the norm to create a better life and unrequited love that can last for a moment or a lifetime.

The lyrics to the haunting end credits music by David Byrne's Road to Nowhereexpress how I feel about Transitthe best..

Well we know where we're going
But we don't know where we've been
And we know what we're knowing
But we can't say what we've seen
And we're not little children
And we know what we want
And the future is certain
Give us time to work it out
We're on a road to nowhere
Come on inside
Taking that ride to nowhere
We'll take that ride
I'm feeling okay this morning
We're on the road to paradise
Here we go, here we go

Produced by the Match Factoryand Music Box FilmsTransithits theatres on March 1st.

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Carla Renata

Fellow Movie Lovers...

Carla Renata aka The Curvy Film Critic is a graduate of Howard University and named one of 2018’s Underrepresented Critics of Color by the Los Angeles Times. Her reviews, articles and/or op-ed's have been featured at AAFCA.com, Ebony.com, NPR.org, her own site The Curvy Film Critic, ET Live! Maltin on Movies, Ebert.com, as well as Shadow and Act, EUR Web, FOX 11-LA and Variety. She has served as a moderator, host or gust film expert for MPTF’s Night Before the Oscars, Good Day LA, Fox 11-LA, Film Independent’s Spirit Awards backstage and hosted an evening of The Black Experience on Film for Turner Classic Movies sponsored by AAFCA.

Being a proud member of AAFCA (African American Film Critics Association), (OAFFC) The Online Association of Female Film Critics, (AWFJ) Alliance of Female Journalists, Tomato-meter approved critic on Rotten Tomatoes and a member of (CCA) Critics Choice Association.

The Curvy Critic with Carla Renata streams LIVE every Sunday 5pm PST via YouTube featuring reviews, news and interviews with talent in front and behind the camera.